What is the “Pre-Raphaelite Woman”?

Women are central figures in Pre-Raphaelite art, and this has given rise to the concept of a “Pre-Raphaelite Woman.” I frequently see the term in te media, usually describing an actress or singer with long curly hair. Florence Welch is often described as Pre-Raphaelite, a look she has embraced.

But was there a unified ideal? If we look beyond the canvasses and see the living women who posed for them, we see different types of women. To the credit of the Pre-Raphaelites and their followers, not just one type of woman was idealized. Women of different shapes and sizes were used as inspiration, and the strengths of each have merged into what we now recognize as the Pre-Raphaelite Stunner.

While I abhor the act of reducing a woman by referring solely to her physical appearance, let’s look at a few of the models and how their images shaped what we now describe as “Pre-Raphaelite.”

Elizabeth Siddal
One of the earliest models was Elizabeth Siddal. Discovered while working in Mrs. Tozer’s millinery shop, Siddal first appeared in Walter Howell Deverell’s painting Twelfth Night. She went on to model for William Holman Hunt and John Everett Millais (as his famous Ophelia). Eventually she posed only for Dante Gabriel Rossetti. Siddal became his pupil and embarked on a promising art career of her own. Their on/off relationship lasted nearly a decade before they finally married in 1860.

Always described as being in ill-health, Siddal was addicted to the opiate Laudanum. A stillborn daughter was the tragedy that sealed her fate and Siddal’s depression sent her further into the depths of addiction, resulting in her overdose death in 1862.

Her passing affected Rossetti for the rest of his life. Seven years later, while struggling with mental health issues, Rossetti had her grave exhumed in order to retrieve the poems he had buried with her. It was a sad, tumultuous time in his life and that one act has forever linked Siddal’s name with a tinge of the macabre.

At the beginning, though, her features inspired Rossetti’s work. In the words of his sister Christina Rossetti’s poemIn An Artist’s Studio, “He feeds upon her face by day and night.”

In a similar vein, fellow artist Ford Madox Brown described Rossetti’s repeated and obsessive drawings of Siddal as a “monomania.” In a letter to Madox Brown, Rossetti confided that when he first saw her, he felt “his destiny was defined.” I’m sure he meant on a personal level, but on a professional level it certainly does seem that the destiny of his work was defined when she became his muse. Her features are discernible in most of his drawings and paintings of the 1850s.

Elizabeth Siddal drawn by Dante Gabriel Rossetti

Elizabeth Siddal was not a conventional Victorian beauty. A petite frame was prized at the time and she was considered quite tall. Red hair was also not in favor, yet Rossetti and other Pre-Raphaelite artists depicted flowing red locks with such magnificence that they challenged the notion that red hair was both ugly and unlucky.

Later, Siddal’s hair would become famous when Charles Augustus Howell reported that it had continued to grow after death, supernaturally filling her coffin. While obviously untrue, it has become another Pre-Raphaelite tale that has passed into legend.

Dante Gabriel Rossetti portrait of Elizabeth Siddal, 1854

While Rossetti fed upon her face (how parasitic that sounds) and was inspired by his muse’s features, it is interesting to see how Elizabeth Siddal viewed herself.

Her self-portrait embraces the Pre-Raphaelite maxim of “truth to nature” yet it would never be described as what we consider the typical Pre-Raphaelite female. She portrays herself in a forthright manner; Siddal’s portrayal of herself is unflinching.

Annie Miller
Annie Miller was William Holman Hunt’s muse. Like Elizabeth Siddal, Miller’s image appears in early Pre-Raphaelite works. Hunt intended to marry her (eventually) and set about having her take lessons to become more refined. Although he set about to improve her life, their relationship did not end well and marriage never took place. Hunt was not overly pleased with her behavior while he traveled to the Middle East to paint. (For that matter, Elizabeth Siddal wasn’t ecstatic about Miller’s relationship with Rossetti.)

It is Rossetti’s images of Miller that I will share below, since Hunt removed Miller’s likeness from his paintings of her, including The Awaking Conscience and Il Dolce Far Niente.

Annie Miller, drawn by Dante Gabriel Rossetti

Annie Miller as Helen of Troy. Painted by Dante Gabriel Rossetti.

Annie Miller in Dante Gabriel Rossetti’s painting ‘Woman in Yellow’

Photograph of Annie Miller

Effie Millais
Effie was trapped in a cold, loveless marriage to art critic John Ruskin when artist John Everett Millais fell in love with her. After a legal annulment (and the humiliation of having to prove her virginity), Millais and Effie were married. (See Pre-Raphaelite Marriages: Ruskin, Effie and Millais.)

Effie was still married to Ruskin when Millais painted her in The Order of Release

Study of Effie Millais for ‘The Eve of St. Agnes’

Photograph of Effie Millais

Fanny Cornforth
Fanny Cornforth may have been Rossetti’s truest female friend. Often disparaged by those close to Rossetti, she appears to have been unwavering in her loyalty. Her entry into his life inspired a new, sensuous aspect to his work. The first and most obvious example is Bocca Baciata (The Kissed Mouth). The title itself embraces physical pleasure.

Where Elizabeth Siddal was said to be thin and underweight due to illness, Fanny Cornforth was plumper, healthier, and robust. Siddal would be his idealized muse, a woman to put on a pedestal and admire. But Cornforth was a woman to experience life and laughter with, a woman to enjoy unashamedly. Unfortunately for her, she was not the woman Rossetti would marry.

Georgiana Burne-Jones
Georgiana Burne-Jones became engaged to Edward Burne-Jones in her adolescence. She was known for her kind disposition and was a loving wife to “Ned.”

Georgiana, known as “Georgie,” was the fifth of eleven children and one of the “MacDonald sisters.” Her sister Agnes married Edward Poynter, a painter who eventually became Director of the National Gallery and, later, President of the Royal Academy. Their sister Louisa gave birth to future Prime Minister Stanley Baldwin and another sister, Alice, was the mother of Rudyard Kipling.

Georgiana Burne-Jones, drawn by Dante Gabriel Rossetti

Portrait of Georgiana Burne-Jones by Sir Edward Coley Burne-Jones

Georgiana Burne-Jones, painted by Sir Edward Burne-Jones

Georgiana Burne-Jones

Maria Zambaco
Although the Burne-Joneses enjoyed a long and happy marriage, Ned did have an extramarital relationship with Maria Zambaco and she is seen repeatedly in his work. What started out as a passion turned incredibly ugly, however, and eventually his depictions of her seemed to have double meanings. (See my blog post The End of the Affair.)

Jane MorrisJane Morris was introduced to the Pre-Raphaelite circle in Oxford. While attending a theatre performance, she was spotted by Dante Gabriel Rossetti and Edward Burne-Jones.

Later she married Rossetti’s close friend William Morris and several years after the death of Elizabeth Siddal, Rossetti and Jane Morris began a passionate romance. It’s a relationship that is still provocative and interesting to those of us interested in Pre-Raphaelite art, as William Morris apparently knew of it and while he must have been heartbroken, he was always loving and supportive towards Jane.

Rossetti’s paintings of Jane took on the same obsessive quality seen in his repeated drawings of Elizabeth Siddal years before, echoing Christina Rossetti’s poem In An Artist’s Studio. Once again, the artist feeds upon the face of a muse.

Alexa Wilding
When Rossetti spotted Alexa Wilding on a busy street, he immediately approached her to sit for him. She was quite tall, and even though he painted works featuring Alexa during the same time period he was painting Jane, they could not be more different in looks. They were physically different types, yet Rossetti would embellish and add his characteristic touches to both – those Rossetti lips, strong arms, and lengthened necks.

What about Pre-Raphaelite beauty in today’s woman?
It may seem as if I am pitting these women against each other and sizing them up according to physical appearance – that is not my intention at all. Rather, I’m trying to demonstrate that what we perceive today as Pre-Raphaelite beauty is, in fact, an amalgamation.

The Pre-Raphaelites were a varied group, and their individual perceptions of what was aesthetically pleasing have blended together into something beautiful and bold.

That is a liberating and inspiring concept. It tells us that we are each Pre-Raphaelite Stunners. It took several types of women to develop the Pre-Raphaelite ideal; it takes women of all types to make up our world.

Resist the narrow definitions of beauty that society uses to define us. Embrace what you feel are your strengths and silence the negative voice that finds fault. Look in the mirror, strike a pose, and know you are Beauty personified.

I love that Pre-Raphaelite art fell just outside the norms of conventional beauty for the time, and then went on to inspire the next generation (Art Nouveau, etc). And especially in Lizzie Siddal and Jane Morris’ case, the fact that they dressed without corsets and similar restrictions of the day is admirable.

Hello Stephanie. I am new to your lovely site and want to say that I enjoyed this post tremendously! Being an artist myself, I have long loved and taken inspiration from Pre-Raphaelite art. But just in the last year, I have dug deep to find out anything and everything about the immortal women who truly made these paintings beautiful. (I feel that I am “feeding upon their faces” and lives!) Again, wonderful post and I am so glad to have found your site!
Merissa

Wonderfully interesting post! Thanks for showing how the pre-raphaelite models did encompass a range of types. However, the problem remains that they are all young and beautiful, and in the case of Rossetti and Burne Jones, heavily stylized to the point of almost looking unreal. I suppose this is one of the criticisms of pre-raphaelite art – it shows an unreal, fantasy world – it doesn’t show the real world or real people as they actually are. Apart from Millais who moved on to portraiture, I can’t think of any pre raph works depicting middle aged or older women. Compare this with Rembrandt and the Dutch masters who really knew how to bring out the beauty and character in an old persons face and in everyday life.

This was so inspiring! People always said me I wasn’t pretty because I don’t the current beauty ideal, but thanks to you now I see that there’s so many ways of being beautiful and one just have to find hers!
Thank you so much!

Research on “why do so many pre-Raphaelite women have red hair?” led me to your website and gave me a very clear answer on that subject. I am trying to advise a friend who has to do a flower arrangement inspired by “Soul of the Rose” by Waterhouse. Clearly red flowers will have to feature in the arrangement. I have a broader interest, in that I live in Ewell Village, well known to the Pre-Raphaelites as they all visited Holman Hunt’s Uncle’s farm next to the village church (only its simple wooden barn survives) Ewell (it means “spring”) is the source of the Hogsmill River, which springs full-sized in the grounds of a local park in the heart of the village and it is this river in which the drowning Ophelia is shown in Millais’s painting (though the site was further away).
So, thanks for your help! this sort of research is invaluable and fascinating to your readers. EVN